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This is the accepted version of a paper published in Organization. This paper has been peer-reviewedbut does not include the final publisher proof-corrections or journal pagination.
Citation for the original published paper (version of record):
Thanem, T., Wallenberg, L. (2015)
What can bodies do? Reading Spinoza for an affective ethics of organizational life.
Organization, 22(2): 235-250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350508414558725
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What can bodies do? Reading Spinoza for an affective ethics of organizational life
Torkild Thanem and Louise Wallenberg, Stockholm University
The final version of this paper is published in Organization: The Critical Journal of Organization, Theory and
Society, 2015, vol. 21, no. 2, special issue on ‘Ethics, Embodiment and Organizations’.
Abstract
Recent attempts to develop an embodied understanding of ethics in organizations have tended to mobilize a Levinasian and ‘im/possible’ ethics of recognition, which separates ethics and embodiment from politics and organization. We argue that this separation is unrealistic, unsustainable, and an unhelpful starting point for an embodied ethics of organizations. Instead of rescuing and modifying the ethics of recognition, we propose an embodied ethics of organizational life through Spinoza’s affective ethics. Neither a moral rule system nor an infinite duty to recognize the other, Spinoza offers a theory of the good, powerful and joyful life by asking what bodies can do. Rather than an unrestrained, irresponsible and individualistic quest for power and freedom, this suggests that we enhance our capacities to affect and be affected by relating to a variety of different bodies. We first scrutinize recent attempts to develop an ethics of recognition and embodiment in organization studies. We then explore key concepts and central arguments of Spinozian ethics. Finally, we discuss what a Spinozian ethics means for the theory and practice of embodied ethics in organizational life.
Keywords: Affectivity, diversity in organizations, embodied ethics, freedom, power, recognition, responsibility, Spinoza.
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Introduction
At last, it has become more difficult for organizational scholars to
speak in the name of rationalist ethics. Rationalist formulations
have come under increasing attack, for assuming that ethics
requires control of our passions, emotions and bodies, and for
maintaining that ethical problems can be finally resolved by
following rules, maximizing utility or acting virtuously (see, for
example, Parker, 1998; Ten Bos and Willmott, 2001). Instead, it
has become more widely accepted to view ethics as an on-‐going,
imperfect and unfinished project, and this has opened up for a
number of attempts to construe ethics, in a Levinasian manner, as
a pre-‐rational, pre-‐reflective, emotional and embodied process
(e.g. Hancock, 2008; Pullen and Rhodes, 2010).
It now seems virtually impossible to engage critically with
ethics in organization studies without engaging Levinas’
embodied ethics of recognition. Meanwhile, Levinasian ethics is
itself an ethics of impossibility. In pursuit of a proto-‐ethics, that is,
an ethics of ethics, Levinas sought to draw up the limits of ethics
and establish the primacy of ethics (Jones, 2003). For Levinas, the
3
ethical encounter between self and other is primordial, preceding
ontology and politics. Ethics is a matter of fully recognizing the
other, and it is the self’s embodied encounter with the other that
enables it to do so—to be unconditionally open to the other, to put
the other before the self, and to exercise infinite responsibility for
the other without being polluted by politics and without first
being-‐in-‐itself and being-‐for-‐itself. Placing infinite demands on the
self to be for the other, Levinasian ethics is an ongoing and
impossible project because it can never be fully realized and
finally completed.
This has inspired attempts in organization studies to modify
the Levinasian project: rejecting the primordiality of ethics
(Hancock, 2008), admitting that ethics can only be realized with
politics (McMurray et al., 2011; Rhodes, 2012), hinting at the
affective dimension of ethics (Bevan and Corvellec, 2007; Rhodes,
2012), and sketching out ethical organizational guidelines from
Levinasian principles (Bevan and Corvellec, 2007; Wray-‐Bliss,
2013). Nonetheless, as the ethics of recognition remains central if
not perfectly intact in these contributions, we find it more fruitful
4
to make a new start, to develop an affectively embodied ethics of
organizations by utilizing ideas that long precede Levinas. At the
risk of reconstructing ethics beyond recognition, we turn to the
enfant terrible of ethics: Benedict de Spinoza (1632–1677). Doing
so, we focus on his magnum opus, the Ethics (Spinoza, 1994
[1677]), but we also draw on his political writings, the
Theological-‐Political Treatise (Spinoza, 2007 [1670]) and the
Political Treatise (Spinoza, 2000 [1675–1676]).1
From an affective ethics of the good, powerful and joyful life,
Spinoza offers radical ways to rework the possibilities and limits
of embodied ethics: to reconsider basic assumptions regarding the
relations between rationality and embodiment, ethics, ontology
and politics; to rethink key ethical concepts of freedom,
responsibility, difference and affectivity; and to re-‐imagine ethical
practices within and around organizations. Rather than a moral
rule system or an infinite duty to recognize the other, Spinoza asks
what bodies can do. However, this does not imply an unrestrained,
irresponsible and individualistic quest for power and freedom, but
5
suggests that we enhance our capacities to affect and be affected
by relating to a variety of different bodies.
This is not the first attempt to engage with Spinoza in
organization studies (see Spoelstra, 2007) or to rework
organizational ethics through Spinoza (see Thanem, 2011). Still,
previous stabs at a Spinozian ethics of organizational life remain
rudimentary, and more needs to be done to position Spinozian
ethics in relation to the Levinasian and otherwise critical
literature on organizational ethics, and to articulate its
possibilities and limits in the context of organizational life. Hence,
we realize that several questions in the Levinasian literature
cannot be simply ignored or rejected, but provide points of
departure for further engagement: Does ethics come before
ontology and politics? Is embodiment opposed to rationality? Is it
possible to practice an affectively embodied ethics in
organizations? And if so, how may this influence how people in
organizations relate to themselves and to others?
Given the wave of Levinasian writings on organizational
ethics, this may seem a daunting task. The primordial status
6
Levinas attributes to ethics and his separation of ethics from
politics is a reversal of Spinozianism. And although Levinas did
not engage in depth with Spinoza, he openly critiqued Spinoza,
denouncing his atheism (Levinas, 1990 [1955]), misreading him
as a rationalist (Levinas, 1969 [1961]), viewing his notion of
eternity as a totality excluding the other (Levinas, 1969 [1961]),
and reducing the ‘Spinozan [sic] conatus essendi’ to a matter of
self-‐interest and self-‐preservation leading to a war of all against
all (Levinas, 1998 [1991]: xii; see Lefebvre, 2006; Juffé, 2008).
While self-‐interest and self-‐preservation continue to receive
bad press in the organizational ethics literature (Ten Bos and
Willmott, 2001), Spinozianism has ‘always’ been under attack. In
1656, Spinoza was knife-‐attacked on the steps of the local
synagogue and excommunicated for his ‘monstrous deeds’ (Lloyd,
1996). In Bayle’s (1826 [1697]) influential dictionary, he was
attacked for his atheist concept of God, and in the 18th century, it
became common practice ‘to insult Spinoza and his theory before
discussing it’ (Popkin, 1979: 67). Indeed, Hume (1739) is likely to
only have read Bayle when, in the Treatise of Human Nature,
7
rejecting Spinoza’s ‘hideous hypothesis’ of a contradictory God as
unitary substance productive of different modifications in our
passions and souls (p. 241ff; Popkin, 1979). And even though
Hume did not explicitly reject Spinoza’s move from ontological
speculation to ethical practice, Hume’s guillotine against moves
from the is to the ought has recently been repeated in this journal
to rebuff arguments for Spinozian ethics (see Parker, 2012).
Despite such discouragement, we argue that Spinozian
ethics, which is inseparable from ontology and politics, enables an
affectively embodied ethics of organizations more realistic and
sustainable than any ethics of recognition. Doing so, we extend
our reading of Spinoza into the philosophical works of Balibar,
Deleuze, Gatens and Lloyd. This is no obvious choice. Spinoza’s
convoluted style and contradictory arguments have enabled
several competing interpretations: (i) Spinoza’s geometric method
of logical deduction and discussion of the virtues of reason has led
mainstream historians of philosophy and analytic philosophers to
view Spinoza as a rationalist (Bennett, 1984; Hampshire, 1951;
Koistinen, 2009); (ii) liberalist commentators in political
8
philosophy have taken Spinoza’s emphasis on the freedom of
thought as a precurse to the 18th century Enlightenment (Israel,
2007) and economic liberalism (Feuer, 1958; Smith, 1997); (iii)
neo-‐Marxists have celebrated Spinoza’s implicit emphasis on class
antagonism (Althusser, 1970) while post-‐Marxists have reiterated
the Spinozian multitude as a subject of political resistance and
transformation (Hardt and Negri, 2004); and (iv) the affective
turn in cultural and social thought has, among other things,
utilized Spinoza to theorize social affect beyond the dualism of
personal feelings and collective emotions (Seyfert, 2012).
This variety of readings highlights the difficulty of
interpreting Spinoza’s ideas and bringing them into organization
studies. We therefore make no claim to offer a representative
account of Spinoza’s work. Rather, we admit inspiration from
Deleuze’s (1995) philosophical buggery, and attempt a selective
reading for an affectively embodied ethics of organizational life.
As we pursue a Spinozian ethics contrary to rationalist and
liberalist commentaries and against Levinas, we do so despite the
risk that this might make Spinoza unrecognizable to Deleuze and
9
to our other interlocutors. Still, Deleuze’s expressionist reading
helps us pose an ethics larger than morality and grounded in the
material politics of affective relations between bodies. Gatens and
Lloyd’s feminist reading helps us reiterate issues of difference,
freedom and responsibility and move beyond the Levinasian
caricature of Spinozianism as the self-‐interested pursuit of power,
freedom and sameness, and Balibar’s post-‐Marxist reading helps
us relate Spinoza’s writings to the historical–political context he
worked in and connect Spinoza to practical questions of
organizational ethics. Like Gatens and Lloyd (1999), we realize
that Spinoza excluded women, foreigners, slaves, children and
criminals because he did not foresee that they could become
independent, reasonable and free. Rather than dismissing Spinoza
on these grounds, it is important that we think with and beyond
Spinoza: despite his limited politics, his concepts are useful.
In what follows, we first interrogate recent attempts at an
ethics of recognition and embodiment in organization studies. We
then explore key concepts and central arguments of Spinozian
10
ethics. Finally, we discuss what this means for the theory and
practice of embodied ethics in organizational life.
Ethics of recognition and embodiment
Sometimes speaking out ‘against ethics’, commentators on
organizational ethics have denounced the certainties and moral
perfectionism associated with the rationalist frameworks of
utilitarian, deontological and virtue-‐based ethics, and their
respective assumptions that ethical problems can be resolved by
calculating aggregated costs and benefits, imposing rules and
codes of conduct, or cultivating pre-‐defined virtues (see e.g.
Parker, 1998; Rhodes, 2012; Ten Bos and Willmott, 2001; Wray-‐
Bliss, 2013). Instead, the argument is for an ethics that does not
pass final judgement or reach final ethical decisions, but
constitutes an on-‐going and forever unfinished project of critically
engaging with real ethical problems (see also Jones et al., 2005):
since we cannot truthfully and completely know the world, we
cannot know once and for all how to act morally in the world
(Parker, 1998).
11
For several commentators, the on-‐going and unfinished
nature of ethics is related to the emotional and embodied
character of human existence. In opposition to rationalist ethics,
which demotes our bodies, desires, passions and emotions to a
dark, disorderly side of non-‐rationality, untrustworthiness and
immorality (Ten Bos and Willmott, 2001), it is argued that a
detached and disembodied ethics cannot recognize and do justice
to the otherness of real others (Wray-‐Bliss, 2013), and that ethics
cannot be exercised without feelings of love, guilt and shame
(Fineman, 1993). Rather, it is our physical proximity to the other
and our wrestling with feelings of love, guilt and shame that make
us struggle to decide how to act morally in given situations (Ten
Bos and Willmott, 2001).
Although some of this literature has rejected the dualisms of
rationalist and anti-‐rationalist ethics (Ten Bos and Willmott,
2001), much of it works from a Levinasian position that construes
ethics and embodiment as contrary to rationality, as non-‐
rationalizable, and as primary (e.g. Bevan and Corvellec, 2007;
Rhodes, 2012). According to Levinas, ethics and the ethical face-‐
12
to-‐face encounter with the other comes before everything else –
before ontology and politics. For Levinas, there is no being before
we ethically encounter the other, and there can be no ethics after
or entangled with politics, because politics contaminates. Whereas
Levinas views ethics as a pre-‐reflective, pre-‐rational,
unconditional and open response to the other, he views politics as
a conscious, conditional, closed and judgmental response whereby
the self selects and decides how to respond (Diprose, 2002).
Politics, then, is a ‘homogenising and totalising’ force (Wray-‐Bliss,
2013: 93), which, geared to organize society for survival (Diprose,
2002: 169), closes down ethics. Some commentators have
extended this dichotomy to the relationship between bodies and
organizations in a way which ignores that organizations are made
up of people with bodies and contradicts Levinas’ separation of
pre-‐reflective ethics from conscious politics: According to Bevan
and Corvellec (2007: 212), Levinasian ethics is not only contrary
to management hierarchies, but organizations are ‘bereft of
corporeal subjectivity’ and cannot be open towards the other
13
because they are ‘bloodless, insensible, incapable of consciousness
or intention’.
Admittedly, the primordiality of ethics is not accepted by all
Levinasians in organization studies (e.g. Hancock, 2008). Still, the
ethics of recognition implied by the face-‐to-‐face encounter
between self and other remains fundamental in this literature. The
face-‐to-‐face encounter with the other is a given which demands
absolute recognition of the other, infinite responsibility for the
other (Bevan and Corvellec, 2007), respect for the difference of
the other (Rhodes, 2012), and radical openness to the gift of the
other, even, according to some commentators, at the risk of
violence and death (Jones, 2003). As Levinas puts the other before
the self, he makes the ethical self not just open to the other but
fundamentally vulnerable—a hostage to the other (Diprose,
2002), required to ‘do the impossible’ and separated from our
‘capacity to act’ (Smith, 2007: 68).
Openness to the gift of the other is a key point in recent
attempts to develop an ethics of corporeal generosity in
organizations with Levinasian ethics. Diprose’s (2002) work has
14
been influential here. While rejecting the Levinasian primordiality
of ethics, Diprose and her followers in organization studies
(Hancock, 2008; Pullen and Rhodes, 2010) argue that corporeal
generosity and openness towards the other implies full
recognition of the other without being demanded and without any
Maussian expectation of mutual exchange, reciprocation and
return. Rather, the given generosity of the other invites
recognition and response by the self in the first place, and the
self’s recognition of the other opens the self up to the gift of the
other. Operating ‘in relations between bodies’ (Diprose in
Hancock, 2008: 1368), it is argued that such generosity may open
ethical communities to cultural difference, and transform
subjectivities and the social imaginaries that govern how we view
and relate to ourselves and to others. Furthermore, it is argued
that organizations can nurture such generosity by celebrating and
recognizing the embodied generosity involved as employees raise
children and care for others (Hancock, 2008). Unfortunately, more
emphasis is on the self’s generous giving to the other than on the
15
self’s openness to be transformed by the gift of the other, which
necessarily would make the self more vulnerable (Thanem, 2011).
This may be one reason why Levinasian contributions have
recognized that such ethical relations, when realized in everyday
life and organizations, are in tension with though not completely
opposed to or separate from politics. Rather, ethics gives rise to
politics. As ethics necessitates the exercise of power to attend to
others and compromise between the competing demands of other
others (Rhodes, 2012), politics is ‘the attempt to articulate
responsibility’ for the other (Wray-‐Bliss, 2013: 93) that enables us
to respond ethically, take action in response to injustice, and
realize the ethical demand of changing how things are organized
(McMurray et al., 2011). While taking political action in order to
attend to others violates ethics because it displaces attention from
other others, it is claimed that this is no ground for abandoning
Levinasian ethics but instead good reason for moving from the
pure impossibility of ethics to the real possibilities of politics
(McMurray et al., 2011). Allegedly, this may take various forms,
from preparing to answer and make an effort to respond to the
16
other, to ethically redesigning organizations through legislation,
enhanced representation of labour, and strengthening of
community responsibilities (Wray-‐Bliss, 2013).
This creates at least two problems. First, and if political
action involves preparing to answer and respond to the other,
how can one make sure such efforts do not end up as empty
justifications for injustice? Second, Levinasian ethics
depersonalizes (Diprose, 2002) and disembodies politics in ways
that depend on social relations of domination and injustice. On
Levinas’ notion of unconditional generosity, it makes no difference
who the other is and what she or he has done, as the other
includes ruling others who have gained their position by
ungenerously exploiting, dominating and enacting closure on the
other. Moreover, we remain unconvinced by the initial separation
of ethics from politics—why start out from an ethics separate
from politics if they have to be connected once we find ourselves
dealing with concrete practices in real ethical relations?
Finally, Levinasian commentators have hinted at an affective
dimension in Levinasian ethics involving ‘pre-‐rational affective
17
relations between people’ (Rhodes, 2012: 1311) and an ‘affective,
nearly sensual, approach to the Other’ (Bevan and Corvellec,
2007: 210). Although the sensual, the emotional and the pre-‐
rational are inseparable from a Spinozian account of affectivity
too, Spinozian affectivity embodies power relations, which remain
absent in the Levinasian literature. As bodies are related in and
prosper from their desire to affect and be affected by one another
(EIVP38-‐40; TP2/15; TTP5/7, TTP16/5, TTP20), it makes no
sense to separate ethics from ontology and politics.
Affective ethics
Deleuze’s expressive (1992 [1968]) and ethological (1988 [1970])
rereading of Spinoza’s Ethics interrupts the rationalist stream in
Spinoza studies. It is not unproblematic, however. Spinoza never
mentions ‘ethology’ and never discusses ‘expression’ as such
(Macherey, 1996), despite his concern with how God and his
attributes express eternal essence (e.g. EIP11), how the body
expresses God’s essence (EIIDef1), and how ideas express ‘a
constitution of the body’ (EIIIDefAff). Nevertheless, Deleuze
18
(1992: 41-‐51) teases out how Spinozian rationality, reason and
ethics is entangled with materiality, embodiment and passion,
from a starting point where everything is generated by and
expressive of one and the same primordial substance (EIP11,
P15), the source of all things and ideas, which Spinoza called God
but possibly meant Nature (Lloyd, 1996).
A crucial point for Deleuze (1988, 1992) is Spinoza’s
(EIIP11, P13) rejection of the mind–body dualism and the
assumption that the mind can rationally control the passionate
body. But equally important is Spinoza’s (EIIIP2S) reformulation
of ethics as a ‘theory of power’ (Deleuze, 1988: 104), as an
affective question of power and capacity, of ‘what the body can
do’, rather than a matter of moral rules aimed to define and
govern good and evil (Deleuze, 1992: 217–34, 1988: 17–29).
Indeed, Spinoza equalled right with power (EIVP37; TP2/3;
TTP16/3), and consistently depicted a political reality of
conflictual relations between bodies, which precedes and enables
ethics (EIP11S4; TP10/10).
19
The first point rejects Levinas’ assumption that embodiment
precedes mind. According to Spinoza, thought and extension are
two parallel attributes of the same primordial substance (EIIP1-‐
2), of which the human mind and body are two parallel modes of
substance (EIIP11, P13). Neither dominated by nor preceding the
mind, the body is what the mind knows (EIIP13), albeit
inadequately (EIIP19, P24). This involves mind and body, reason
and emotion, in an interdependent union fundamentally different
from Cartesianism and Levinasianism.
The second point refuses Levinas’ privileging and separation
of ethics from politics and ontology. But while certain
commentators have accused Deleuze of an incoherent, relativist
and immoralist reading of Spinoza (e.g. Norris, 1991), Deleuze’s
(1992) concern with what a body can do is no simple matter of
self-‐survival, self-‐persistence or the expansion of individual
power and freedom. Deleuze (1988: 69) emphasizes that Spinoza
rejected free will as an illusion that neglects the external and
internal forces that affect and govern human conduct (EIP32,
EIApp3, EIIP48). As we discuss below, Gatens and Lloyd (1999) go
20
further, arguing that Spinoza’s affective understanding of freedom
implies a genuine concern with responsibility. Again, this is not
unproblematic, as Spinoza never used the term ‘responsibility’.
But before returning to these issues, let us examine Spinoza’s
concept of affectivity, which underpins his understanding of
embodiment, power and freedom.
Affectivity
Deleuze’s reading of Spinozian ethics as an ethological and
affective theory of power rather than a moral philosophy
emphasizes the question of what a body can do, which Spinoza
(EIIIP2S) poses as follows:
no one has yet determined what the body can do, that is,
experience has not yet taught anyone what the body can do
from the laws of Nature alone, insofar as Nature is only
considered to be corporeal, and what the body can do only if it
is determined by the mind. For no one has yet come to know
the structure of the body so accurately that he could explain
21
all its functions [...] This shows well enough that the body
itself, simply from the laws of its own nature, can do many
things which its mind wonders at.
Beyond challenging the mind–body dualism, this highlights
the dynamic capacities of the body. This is a question of the body’s
power to affect and be affected by other bodies, independently of
any will power of the mind. Moreover, it involves a complex
reality of affective relations between bodies who all seek the good,
powerful and joyful life by enhancing their capacity to affect and
be affected by others.
The underlying politics here cannot be exaggerated. Not only
is a body’s capacity to exist a result of its power (EIP11S3-‐4):
‘every right of each one is defined by his [sic] [...] power’ (EIVP37;
our emphasis), and ‘every natural thing has as much right from
Nature as it has power to exist and to act’ (TP2/3). However, this
further suggests that power, right and the capacity to affect and be
affected is unequally distributed. And since the power of each
body is ‘infinitely surpassed by the power of external causes’
22
(EIVP3), bodies seek to persevere by entering into affective
relations with other bodies that enhance their capacities
(EIVP38).
Borrowing from the Stoics, Spinoza calls this ‘indefinite’,
unpredictable and uncontrollable striving to persevere the
conatus, and argues that ‘Each thing, as far as it can by its power,
strives to persevere in its being’ (EIIIP6, P8). Although the conatus
has been subject to considerable discussion in Spinoza studies, we
would argue, with Deleuze (1992: 230–31) and Lloyd (1996: 9),
that Spinoza’s conatus is non-‐teleological. At once ontological
essence and ethical aim of the body, the conatus defines the body
by its immanent striving rather than by what it strives towards:
the body is not striving towards the good, but striving is itself
good.
The conatus puts human bodies into affective relations with
other bodies, and Spinoza emphasizes that human bodies are
composite bodies, which, unlike simple bodies, ‘can be affected in
many ways, and still preserve their nature’ (EIIP13L7S). Human
bodies, then, affect others through active affects, or actions, ‘of
23
which we are the adequate cause’. Conversely, we are affected by
others through passive affects, or passions, ‘of which we are only
partial cause’ (EIIIDef2-‐3). Whereas actions enhance a body’s
capacities, passions tend to diminish them. Not that all passions
are negative: passions can be joyful or sad (EIIIP11S). Sad
passions include feelings of pain, hatred and envy, which diminish
our power of acting (EIIIP11S, P37, DefAff). Joyful passions
include feelings of pleasure, love and compassion, which enhance
our power of acting (though Spinoza (DefAff25-‐26, 28) does
problematize ‘joyful’ passions such as self-‐esteem and pride).
As humans tend to seek joy and avert sadness (EIIIP28),
Spinoza further argues that we need others, and many others in a
variety of ways: ‘Whatever so disposes the human body that it can
be affected in a great many ways, or renders it capable of affecting
external bodies in a great many ways, is useful’ (EIVP38). Indeed,
‘To be preserved, the human body requires a great many other
bodies’ (EIVP39Dem). While insisting on the necessity of this good
social process in a world where humans are initially powerless
and vulnerable (EIVP3), he acknowledges the difficulty of getting
24
humans to join in larger composite bodies by emphasizing the
conflictual and passionate nature of affective relations: humans
tend to agree very little (EIApp), and we are strongly driven by
our passions (EIVP32).
This generates an ethical project quite different from the
Levinasian, which defines ethical communities as a pre-‐rational
outcome of embodied difference and alterity. In contrast, the
powerful, joyful and ethical life and community Spinoza outlines
requires agreement, harmony, and reason: bodies contrary to our
nature cause sadness and diminish our power (EIVP30); bodies
that agree with our nature are good and useful to our power
(EIVP31). However, it is only by living in accordance with reason
that people can agree (EIVP35), ‘live harmoniously’ and ‘be of
assistance to one another’ (EIVP37, P40).
The strive for harmonious relations strikes an apparent
discord with the critical tradition in organization studies, and
readers hoping for an embodied and politicized ethics might now
worry that all this talk about reason, agreement and harmony
takes us down a path of disembodied, apolitical rationalism. We
25
shall return to this in a moment, but first need to elaborate the
affective relations that foreground reasonable relations.
On Deleuze’s (1992: 236–37) reading, affective relations
between bodies is a matter of composing joyful encounters with
bodies that agree. Since sad, disagreeable encounters means that
one body will decompose the other, their relationship, or both
bodies, bodies tend to seek joy by trying to repeat agreeable
encounters (EIIIP36; Deleuze, 1992: 257; Hardt, 1993). Yet,
repetition is impossible: in addition to our limited power (EIVP3,
App32) and uncontrollable conatus (EIIIP8), people may be
differently affected by the same thing (EIIIP15, P51S). At this
stage, agreement and disagreement are therefore outcomes of
chance encounters between bodies (EIIIP15; Deleuze, 1992: 238)
rather than products of causal regularities. Because it is
impossible to know up front which encounters will generate joy,
one cannot plan for joyful encounters and harmonious alliances.
Instead, one must experiment (Gatens and Lloyd, 1999: 103) with
a variety of bodies and encounters. After all, harmony assumes
variation, not sameness (Gatens and Lloyd, 1999: 55, 128), and a
26
body can only enhance its capacities by connecting to other bodies
with different capacities (EIVP38).
Reason
For Spinoza, the key to pursue joyful encounters and develop
powerful, harmonious alliances is reason (EIVP18S, P37S2), which
Deleuze (1988: 55) redefines as ‘an effort to select and organize
good encounters’. Initially, this seems to put Spinoza at odds with
embodied ethics. However, reason is not a purely epistemic
matter, but always already embodied, social and political. Reason
is not contrary to but part of our nature and desire (EIVP18S).
Hence, it involves a ‘bodily awareness’ (Gatens and Lloyd, 1999:
48), which enables us to be conscious of our appetites (DefAff1). It
could even be argued that Spinoza construed reason as a most
powerful affect, which enables people to develop an affective
rather than a merely cognitive understanding of the passions
(EIVP40-‐73; Deleuze, 1992: 255–72; Gatens and Lloyd, 1999:
144).
27
It should be acknowledged, however, that the embodied
nature of reason is less explicit in what Spinoza says about reason
in part IV of the Ethics, and more apparent in what he says in part
II about the relationship between mind and body. As noted above,
Spinoza’s mind–body parallelism insists that the mind is the idea
of the body and the body is what the mind knows (EIIP13). While
this means that the mind can only know the body through its
modifications and encounters (EIIP19, P39), it further unables the
mind from determining the body and vice versa (EIIIP2).
This rejects the Cartesian tenet that the active mind knows
and can change the passive body, and the Levinasian tendency to
reverse the mind–body dualism and reduce reason to a simple
precursor of rational closure. But more importantly, we read this
to say that we know ourselves, and others, through our embodied
experiences and encounters. Rather than imposing the power of
reason to get rid of the passions, it becomes important to develop
the power of reason to affectively understand how we experience
particular encounters, how we experience the passions they
cause, and how they affect our capacities.
28
Deleuze (1992: 273–88) further embodies Spinoza’s concept
of reason by highlighting the role of the common notions—that
‘the mind is the more capable of perceiving many things
adequately as its body has many things in common with other
bodies’ (EIIP39C). In particular, this emphasizes the mind’s and
the body’s mutual grasp of what the body has in common with
other bodies. However, common notions do not preclude
disagreement. While common notions emerge from our efforts to
seek joyful encounters and form harmonious alliances, they may
be more or less universal (EIIP40S1-‐2). The less universal ones,
which enable us to grasp things from our own perspective, are
most immediately useful. The more universal ones, which we
share even with bodies that disagree with our nature, are not, but
they may enable reasonable bodies to even understand and
experience joy from bodies that disagree so much that they
appear contrary.
The bodily, social and political aspects at play here are
significant. First, a body is reasonable insofar as it knows itself
and the diverse bodies in its surroundings. Second, reasonable
29
bodies are able to join with other bodies, despite some
disagreement, and compose larger, more powerful, yet more
heterogeneous bodies, which incorporate the capacities that made
them different in the first place (EIVP38):
For the more the body is capable of affecting, and being
affected by, external bodies in a great many ways, the more the
mind is capable of thinking. (EIVApp27)
Freedom and responsibility
Reason remains central to Spinoza’s understanding of freedom: it
is a corrective to the imagination and its erroneous illusion of the
free will (EIP32, App3, EIIP48), it enables us to understand the
limits of our freedom (EIVP37S1), and it is crucial to the pursuit of
a good, free and sociable life (EIVP70Dem, P73; TP2/11;
TTP16/10). Spinoza, then, operates far from the liberalist
discourse of individual rights and free will. As Lloyd (1996: 101)
suggests, this defines freedom in terms of the contexts we
embody, and Spinoza is careful to remind us of our limited power
and understanding and our ‘part of the whole of Nature, whose
30
order we follow’ (EIVApp32). Enhancing our capacities and
freedom requires us to understand the conditions of our freedom.
According to Gatens and Lloyd (1999: 49, 54–55), this includes the
internal and external forces that condition our freedom—our
passions and social relations that are ignored by illusory
constructs of the free will. Similarly, Balibar (1998) states that
Spinoza’s rejection of the free will does not reject the striving for
freedom, but enables him to define ‘the real conditions of
freedom’ (p. 117) and the social relations wherein freedom is
cultivated: freedom cannot be achieved by individuals living and
striving in isolation.
Spinoza’s socially embedded notion of freedom is closely
connected to his understanding of the individual, and Balibar
(1997) borrows a concept from Simondon (1989) to argue that
Spinozian individuality is better conceptualized as a process of
‘transindividuality’, where individuals are singular, unique and
separate yet related in ‘an infinite multiplicity of other individuals’
(p. 11).2 As individuals, humans incorporate other individuals
such as air and water molecules, nutrients and bacteria, and are
31
incorporated into larger social individuals such as organizations
and communities. Via part IV of the Ethics, Balibar (1997: 15)
argues that such relations make individuals more complex,
interdependent and autonomous: ‘The more complex an
individual is, the more relationships it will have with the external
world’ (EIVAx), the more it will have in common with others, and
the better capable will it be to join with others in ‘a “collective” or
superior individual’ which does not curtail its freedom (EIVP38-‐
40). Consequently, Spinoza enables us to reject the dichotomy
between individual and community, and conceive of a collective
freedom beyond egoism and altruism where others are useful
because of their difference.
Gatens and Lloyd (1999) extend the concept of
transindividuality to show how Spinoza’s understanding of
freedom is coupled to respect and responsibility for the freedom
of others. Although Gatens and Lloyd are vague about where in
Spinoza they find an understanding of respect and responsibility,
we agree that Spinoza’s emphasis on the sociable character of
freedom and affectivity in part IV of the Ethics has interesting
32
implications for rethinking these issues. As Gatens (1996: 111)
points out in an earlier work, we necessarily seek to ‘assert and
extend’ ourselves in the face of others who ‘strive to do likewise’.
Enhancing our freedom, power and capacities to affect and be
affected requires us to understand and evaluate how we affect and
are affected by others. Gatens and Lloyd (1999) further argue that
our responsibilities are not universally given or freely decided by
individuals but come from those who continue to be harmed and
suffer. We are therefore responsible to enhance our capacities and
exercise freedom in ways that respect others—in ways that do not
harm others or diminish their responsibilities, but take
responsibility to create and support conditions that help others
enhance their capacities.
This understanding of freedom and responsibility shares,
with Levinas, a concern with openness, difference and respect for
others that challenges the boundaries of the self. However, the
political ontology underpinning these Spinozian concepts is
fundamentally different. Agreement, harmony and joy, freedom
and responsibility do not arise out of recognition but out of
33
memory and necessity. Consequently, we do not form harmonious
alliances with others because we recognize the other in the self
and the self in the other, but because our bodies retain traces of
past encounters with other bodies (EIIP17C, EIIIPost2). Recalling
how we changed because of affective encounters with others, we
remember joyful affects that enhanced our capacities (EIIIP36).
And since our memories are as limited (EIIIP18) as our power
(EIVApp32), reason (EIVApp13) and capacity to repeat past
encounters (EIIIP51), this requires experimentation (Gatens and
Lloyd, 1999) as well as skilful organizing of good encounters
(EIVApp13; Deleuze, 1988).
Furthermore, Gatens and Lloyd (1999) suggest that we must
revisit our past encounters and scrutinize how they continue to
affect ourselves and others. While this compels us to take
responsibility for our encounters with others, it neither involves a
set of commandments that can be imposed on us nor a wish-‐list
that we can expect people to take up out of generosity for the
other. Rather, this implies a realistic and brutally honest ethics,
where we take responsibility for how we affect others because we
34
remember how we enjoyed their company and because our
prospering is intricately related to theirs.
This emphasis on usefulness could open Spinozian ethics to
allegations that it is a utilitarian consequentialism and
instrumentalism in disguise. Spinozian ethics is consequentialist,
yes, but not utilitarian or instrumentalist. Although bodies seek
joy and avert sadness, joyfulness cannot be achieved through
cost–benefit analysis. Doing so would privilege the benefit
maximization of selfish individuals and narrow-‐minded
majorities. As Gatens and Lloyd (1999) stress, Spinozianism does
not allow consequences to be aggregated and averaged in a
quantitative manner—consequences can only be evaluated
affectively and qualitatively in terms of what implications they
have for all relations. Maximizing the joy of some at the cost of
others will be unethical because it creates harm and suffering in
others, but also because it cuts us off from affects that otherwise
would enhance our capacities to affect and be affected. Moreover,
it is unfeasible because it creates disagreement, resistance,
disharmony and decomposition.
35
Affective ethics in organizational life
As noted above, the on-‐going and unfinished nature of ethics has
led certain contributors to frame ethics as an impossible and
unreal project: impossible because it can never be fully
accomplished (e.g. Jones, 2003; Parker, 1998; Rhodes, 2012),
unreal because it requires movement beyond current reality
(Jones et al., 2005). We acknowledge the rhetorical appeal in this,
but are troubled by its presupposed ontology of transcendence,
which separates the real from the possible and assumes that
ethics is only possible by overcoming reality, a move already
deemed impossible.
It is more helpful to consider how the questions discussed
above are not impossible but real questions with practical
implications for embodied ethics in organizational life. They are
certainly given a practical and organizational guise in Spinoza’s
political writings. Spinoza opens the Political Treatise by
promising to show ‘how a community [...] should be organised [...]
if [...] the Peace and Freedom of its citizens is to remain inviolate’,
and by critiquing political philosophers for ‘conceiv[ing] men [sic]
36
not as they are but as they would like them to be’ and for ‘never
work[ing] out a political theory that can have practical
application’ (TP1/1). Meanwhile, Spinoza’s Ethics was never ‘just’
an ontological or proto-‐ethical exercise, but, as Balibar (1998)
argues, a foundation and elaboration of his political writings.
Balibar further relates Spinoza’s writings to his engagement
in contemporary politics. Spinoza grew up in a bourgeois
Sephardic family in Amsterdam and was well connected to the
bourgeois regents of the Free Dutch Republic—through his
family’s trade relations and through personal friendships.
Through its pursuit of freedom of speech and freedom of religion,
the Free Republic may have pioneered key principles and
institutions associated with later versions of modern democracy
(Balibar, 1998). However, the Republic was under threat from the
Orange-‐autocratic coalition of rural-‐aristocratic groups, and
Spinoza’s notion of right as power was a warning to ‘Holland’s
rightful rulers’ that they underestimated the power of their
opponents (Montag, 1998). It is also likely that Spinoza critiqued
the bourgeois regents for their limited, idealistic and
37
individualistic notion of freedom based on a belief in free will, and
that he worried about their disconnection from the Dutch
populace (Balibar, 1998).
Spinoza provided principles for a rightful, powerful,
reasonable and sustainable form of government beyond the naïve
libertarianism of the Free Republic and the repressive threat of
the Orange autocrats. Spinoza’s questions posed in the Ethics of
‘how to cultivate joyful passions and a harmonious society’ should
therefore be seen in relation to his arguments that ‘the most
stable state is not all-‐powerful’ (Balibar, 1998: 92; TP8/1;
TTP5/8), that successful institutions promote free citizens
(TP4/5; TTP20/6), and that the wise polity enables people to
participate in institutions where their passions and differences
are negotiated (TTP20/7), even though a stable government
capable of protecting its citizens requires the transferral of rights
from individuals to the state (TP3/3; TTP20/7-‐8). Whereas ethics
involves the striving to enhance our embodied capacities to affect
and be affected in ways that help ourselves and others flourish,
politics is the struggle to embody and embed the different desires,
38
imaginings and capacities of different people in just institutions.
And while democratic and autocratic institutions are necessarily
underpinned by the embodied passions, desires and interests of
those who govern them (TP1/5, TP5/2), this ethico-‐political
struggle is advanced by cultivating an embodied reason whereby
rulers and ruled understand our passions and agreements with
others and limit our individualistic strive for freedom and power.
Viewing Spinozian ethics in light of these arguments is
helpful when considering the implications of Spinozian ethics for
the theory and practice of embodied ethics within and around
organizations. This does not mean that bringing Spinozian ethics
into organizational life is unproblematic. First, Spinoza pursues a
dual emphasis on power—as capacity (potentia) in the Ethics
(EIP11D2, EIIP3S, EIIIP7Dem) and as authority (potestas) in his
political writings (TTP16; TP2) (see Terpstra, 1993)—and it may
be argued that applying Spinozian ethics to organizations takes
bodies into a setting where power is a matter of authority, of
exercising power over others, which undercuts the capacities of
bodies to more openly engage in affective relations with others.
39
Second, it may be argued, with Deleuze, that this involves a move
from the expressive to the representational, which restricts the
expressive capacities of bodies to affect and be affected by others.
Whereas the Political Treatise deals with political
representation and government organization in some detail,
Deleuze’s (1992) expressive reading of the Ethics is a critique of
representation, which stresses how expression exceeds and
escapes representation, and how bodies exceed and escape the
mind. Deleuze (1988) continues this critique in his ethological
reading, separating expression and representation by associating
the former with life, bodies and immanent material reality, and
the latter with transcendental formal ideality. Although Deleuze is
helpful to us in other respects, this is a point where we care to
disagree. We are not denying the representational, restricted and
repressive powers of organizations, but find his dichotomy
between life and organization, body and mind unhelpful. Instead
of reducing organizational life to representation, bringing Spinoza
into organizational life helps understand how life happens in the
midst of organizations, and how people exercise embodied
40
capacities in the midst of authority while seeking to understand
and take responsibility for how we affect and are affected by
others.
Colleagues in organization studies have confronted us with
similar problems. Despite the field’s frequent rejection of dualism
over the past few decades, our previous presentations on
Spinozian ethics have been met by questions of impossibility and
implicit dichotomies between expression and representation,
capacity and authority, reality and possibility: ‘How can joyful
encounters even be possible in organizations, where there is so
much domination and exploitation, so little regard for the truly
different, and so little genuine joy?’ ‘And when did you last have a
joyful encounter?’
In light of the ongoing and unfinished nature of ethics, we
admit that it may be difficult to identify joyful encounters without
turning to clichés. However, Spinozian ethics is not purist, and
few, if any, joyful encounters are purely joyful (DefAff2-‐3). Rather
than a weakness, this is what makes Spinozian ethics sustainable.
There is no illusion that the self will feel compelled to be
41
completely open to the other, fully recognize the other and take
infinite responsibility for the other. Instead, the pursuit of a joyful
organizational life requires us to enhance our powers in ways that
enhance the powers of more or less agreeable others, for instance
by striking alliances with unlikeable colleagues against more
unlikeable managers, or getting to know and learn from someone
who at first seemed to have nothing in common with us. This may
put limits on openness and difference, but also on domination,
exploitation and exclusion.
It is problematic to assume that joyful encounters are less
likely and less tenable in organizations. Sure, organizations are
powerful institutions that continue to dominate, exploit and
exclude employees and external stakeholders. However, being
employed and incorporated in an organization may be a greater
source of joy than being unemployed, left out and ignored as
useless and irrelevant. Our answer to the question of whether
joyful encounters are possible within organizations therefore has
to be a conditional yes, which depends on how our inclusion in the
organization puts us into contact with bodies and ideas that
42
enhance our capacities to affect and be affected by others. This
cannot be assumed up front, but requires careful investigation and
evaluation.
Hence, it is unhelpful to romanticize or demonize
organizations as such. While we sometimes feel dominated,
exploited and excluded in the university organization we work for,
this organization has also enabled us to meet students and
colleagues from different countries and cultures, to be intimidated
and saddened by them, but also enthused, energized and
enchanted. It has enabled us to learn from them, and to develop
new friendships, habits and ways of expressing ourselves.
Furthermore, our organizational couplings have enabled us to do
fieldwork with people who we might otherwise have ignored—
whether consultants we have gone running with, homeless people
we have had lunch with, or transvestites we have dressed up with.
They have all triggered feelings of joy, though not with a complete
absence of sadness, and they have created memories of embodied
encounters that we strive to repeat, however imperfectly and
irregularly. Such encounters are necessarily different for different
43
people, and we resist the temptation to be more specific at this
point.
Of course, organizations frequently give rise to sad
encounters. For us, this is increasingly related to tightening
performance pressures. Such pressures reduce our opportunities
to enhance our own bodily capacities and cut us off from engaging
in meaningful encounters with embodied others through teaching,
fieldwork and collegiality. Moreover, they facilitate a narcissistic
and egoistic concern with individual rights and achievements,
among colleagues, students, and ourselves. For many others,
organizations constitute powerful arenas of domination,
exploitation and exclusion. Following Gatens (1996), this is
related to how dominant groups tend to have similar bodies,
similar capacities and similar relationships to others—to people
who are similar and therefore belong to the same dominant group,
and to people who are different and therefore outside the
dominant group. While the managerial and executive echelons of
organizational life have become more bodily diverse in recent
years in terms of gender, sexuality and ethnicity, persistent homo-‐
44
social reproduction means that male-‐dominated groups in
organizations continue to prefer their own company and relate to
others in reductionist ways. We also know from our empirical
research that straight white and able-‐bodied men and women
managers and professionals have not stopped to underestimate
the skills and knowledge of disabled user groups, express
suspicion towards ethnic minority job-‐seekers, demonize
homeless stakeholders, or question the professionalism of
transgender employees.
If Spinozian ethics is misread as a one-‐way process of
crafting harmonious relations by minimizing difference or a
selfish quest for freedom, and if too much emphasis is put on his
occasional claim that unreasonable people must be forced into
reasonable behaviour (TP3/8), it is unlikely to offer much advice
for ending unjust practices in organizations. However, if we take
seriously the collective responsibility to mutually enhance our
own and others’ embodied capacities to affect and be affected, it
convinces us that domination, exploitation and exclusion, like
individualistic freedom, are not just unethical but unsustainable.
45
As organizations dominate, exploit and exclude people, they treat
people in reductionist ways that cut off organizations and those
they exclude from opportunities to exercise their full capacities.
And as individual employees and managers insist on an
unrestrained freedom to do whatever they like, they undermine
any fruitful social relations. Excess power and freedom causes
harm and suffering and provokes disagreement and resistance,
which inevitably decomposes relations between people and
organizations.
Hence, connections between organizations and people
neither can nor should be maintained at all cost. Although
excluding initially peaceful others might create further harm and
suffering, disagreement and resistance, those same people might
gain more power, freedom and joy from cutting or re-‐negotiating
the link. The current resistance against big business, financial
institutions and oppressive governments cries out that people are
fed up and ready to cut the link with dominant, exploitative,
harmful and sad forms of government and organization. And
without denying the significance of discursive forms of resistance,
46
it is likely that resistance in organizational life may be reinforced
as people feel the pain that these regimes inflict on our bodies—
through the poverty they generate, the natural resources they
appropriate and pollute, the landscapes they destroy, and the
health problems they cause. There are even signs that people
again pursue joyful encounters and harmonious relations
independently of organizations, whether growing our own
vegetables, bartering old clothes and furniture, or exchanging
household favours.
At the same time, Spinozian ethics sits well with an
argument for more diverse organizations—at least insofar as they
enhance the capacities of traditionally marginalized groups to
affect how things are organized, managed and decided, and not
least because marginalized groups tend to have different bodily
experiences of joy and suffering, from life, work and
organizations. However, such a move is not sufficient to create
more joyful and more differently embodied organizations.
Institutions and organizations can only become more joyful and
sustainable if those who manage them and work in them open
47
ourselves up to be affected by people whose bodies and embodied
experiences are truly different from our own. Impossible in
homogeneous groups, this instigates us to develop embodied
forms of reason in concert with others, which enhance our
capacities to remember, critically reflect about and take
responsibility for transforming ourselves as well as the conditions
that have enabled us to dominate, exploit and exclude others
within and around organizations. In our own work, this
encourages us to engage students and research participants in
embodied, face-‐to-‐face interaction, remembering and striving to
recreate joyful encounters, where humility is expressed through
our bodies, and where we engage in conversations and projects
without dominating them—not because we recognize the other,
but because we enjoy their company and understand that we
might learn more from listening and conversing than from
interrupting. We would be wary of opening up equally to anyone,
though, particularly to colleagues who appear similar in terms of
class, age and ethnicity, who share too many of our own
48
experiences, yet constantly turn their backs at us, laugh
sarcastically, and twist our words for their own careerist benefit.
In conclusion
Acknowledging the many conflicting readings of Spinoza’s
philosophy, we have mobilized a limited number of Spinozian
concepts to argue for an affectively embodied ethics of
organizational life. Despite the problems and challenges this
poses, it has enabled us to explore key questions relating to
organizational ethics and the theory and practice of embodied
ethics. Spinozian ethics is neither a normative ethics of moral
rules and guidelines, nor merely a diagnostic analytical
framework. Rather, it offers a theory of the good, joyful and
powerful life, which helps us analyse, enact and hopefully enhance
the affective relations we embody within and around
organizations.
Furthermore, reading Spinoza has enabled us to deal
critically with the Levinasian literature that hitherto has
dominated the pursuit of embodied ethics in organization studies,
49
to argue against the Levinasian ethics of impossibility and
recognition where ethics is posited against organization, and to
dispute wider claims against ethics. That we cannot devise clear-‐
cut rules or finite guidelines for ethical practice does not make
ethics impractical, impossible, or contrary to itself. Instead of
being against ethics or construing ethics as an on-‐going and
impossible project separate from politics, ontology and
organization, Spinozian ethics is a real and practical project. It is
just as on-‐going and almost as open as Levinasian ethics, but
without separating itself from ontology and politics. On Spinozian
ethics, it is the entanglement of ethics with embodied and political
reality which makes it on-‐going and unfinished; it is its on-‐going
and unfinished nature which necessitates practical action for our
mutual striving and flourishing within and beyond organizations;
and it is the emphasis on mutual striving which makes it brutally
honest and more realistic than any ethics of recognition.
As bodies are related in our strivings to affect and be
affected by others, ethics involves enhancing our affective
capacities to do so. While this appetite leads individual bodies to
50
seek to enhance their power and freedom, Spinoza suggests that
joyful and powerful ethical relations can only be crafted and
sustained by communities of reasonable individuals who take
responsibility for honouring and nurturing the difference and
freedom of others. As we embody terrains within and beyond
organizations, this compels us to try and understand the limits of
our freedom, take responsibility for how we affect and are
affected by others, and pursue encounters that enhance our own
and others’ bodily capacities. We can never be rid of the bodily
desires and passions that guide and thwart joyful and powerful
relations or fully understand them. But experimenting with how
we relate to our own bodies and to embodied others, and
remembering the joyful encounters this produced, nurtures an
embodied sense of reason that enhances our capacity to
understand what causes such relations. This is not possible unless
we open ourselves up to affect and be affected by a variety of
different bodies in a variety of ways. And even though
organizations frequently diminish our opportunities to do so, we
must strive to subvert the organizational powers that restrict
51
joyful encounters, and exercise our bodily capacities in concert
with others, in the midst of, yet as far away as possible from
organizational authoritarianism and selfish individualism—not
because we recognise the other, but for our mutual and open-‐
ended flourishing.
Let us end where we began. Since ‘the body itself [...] can do
many things which its mind wonders at’ (EIIIP2S), our musings
here can only begin to explore the Spinozian question of what
bodies can do. Hopefully, this may provoke friends, colleagues and
adversaries to further explore the possibilities and limits of
Spinozian philosophy to theorize and practice an affectively
embodied ethics in organizational life.
Notes
1. References to Spinoza’s works are made as follows: In
references to the Ethics (E), Roman numerals indicate the part
of the Ethics, and Arabic numerals refer to propositions (P),
postulates (Post), definitions (Def), axioms (Ax), lemma (L),
proofs (Dem), corollaries (C), schola (S), and the definitions of
52
the affects in part III (DefAff). References to the Theological-‐
Political Treatise (TTP) and the Political Treatise (TP) refer to
chapter number and paragraph number (e.g. TTP5/7;
TP2/15).
2. As Balibar notes, however, Simondon denied any inspiration
from Spinoza and rejected him as a pantheist.
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